On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 07:07:26PM -0800, Leif Warner wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 10, 2011 at 1:07 PM, Magnus Therning <magnus at therning.org>wrote:
>>> Now we have 300+ packages in [haskell]. It's starting to be a large
>> set, and the time required to build when something changes is starting
>> to really be felt now. So I would like to start a discussion on how we
>> should decide what criteria to use when adding a package, and equally
>> important, what criteria to use when dropping a package.
>>>> My _impression_ is that additions have been a bit willy-nilly. Guided
>> only by what the maintainers fancy at the moment. I also don't think
>> that we've ever dropped a package, ever.
>>>> I feel it's important to me to know that the resources I put into
>> ArchHaskell is appreciated, and every added package increases the
>> resources required. I therefore would like to know that each and ever
>> package in [haskell] is there for a good reason.
>>>> I feel I need to bring this up because there are a few packages in
>> [haskell] that I suspect are there, but aren't widely used. To point
>> fingers, the chief reason is Agda :) This is a package that has a
>> mere 13 votes in AUR, and it takes more than an hour to build it on my
>> laptop (about 70 minutes to be more precise). On each platform!
>>>> FWIW, I could help out with builds these days, if need be. My work
> equipment is a new 4-core (8 w/ HT) machine w/ 8 GB RAM + SSD drive.
It would be excellent if more people could work on keeping [haskell]
up-to-date :)
However, splitting updating the database and the building of packages
is likely to be a bit painful. So far my experience is that updating
packages to a buildable state often requires a few iterations of
modifying patch files and attempting builds. If each such iteration
requires communication it's likely to drag out quite a bit. The ideal
would be a build server really.
/M
--
Magnus Therning OpenPGP: 0xAB4DFBA4
email: magnus at therning.org jabber: magnus at therning.org
twitter: magthe http://therning.org/magnus
I invented the term Object-Oriented, and I can tell you I did not have
C++ in mind.
-- Alan Kay
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